
DC's Legends of Tomorrow
Season 6 Analysis
Season Overview
In season six, Waverider co-captains Sara Lance and Ava Sharpe have dealt with monsters, time anomalies, and most recently, villains from Hell, but this time they will face something even more challenging and bizarre ... space aliens! After one of their own is abducted by a ruthless alien, this new mission becomes personal. It will take more than the combined powers of John Constantine, Mick Rory, Nate Heywood, and brother-sister duo, Zari and Behrad Tarazi, to save the world for a sixth time.
Season Review
Categorical Breakdown
The cast is assembled like a diversity checklist, prioritizing race, ethnicity, and 'outsider' status as the primary traits of the heroes. The narrative frequently highlights the characters' marginalized identities as their greatest strength against a backdrop of historical intolerance.
The Legends treat time travel as an opportunity to fix a 'broken' and 'bigoted' past. Historical settings are portrayed as hostile environments that the modern, enlightened characters must navigate with disdain for the customs and values of the time.
Women occupy every position of authority and competence, while the men are depicted as bumbling, emotionally fragile, or secondary. The season features a prominent storyline where a rough-edged male character is literally 'feminized' by becoming pregnant.
The entire season is anchored by the romance between Sara Lance and Ava Sharpe. Queer identity is the show's baseline 'normal,' and the plot frequently centers on deconstructing traditional gender roles and family structures in favor of alternative lifestyles.
The show replaces traditional spirituality with a mix of occultism and cosmic nihilism. Religious faith is either entirely absent or portrayed as a set of restrictive rules that the free-spirited characters have successfully outgrown.